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Reitzenstein and Qumrân Revisited by an Iranian

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 August 2011

Richard Nelson Frye
Affiliation:
Harvard University

Extract

The following remarks are intended to be merely general indications of overall problems which nonetheless, I believe, are necessary before one investigates specific words or concepts which may be borrowed by one culture from another.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © President and Fellows of Harvard College 1962

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References

1 I use the term ‘Iran’ in an historical context, to mean the vast area where Iranian languages and Iranian culture were dominant. ‘Persia’ would be used for the modern state, more or less equivalent to ‘western Iran.’ I use the term ‘greater Iran’ tomean what I suspect most Classicists and ancient historians really mean by their use of Persia — that which was within the political boundaries of states ruled by Iranians, including Mesopotamia and usually Armenia and Transcaucasia. One must be careful, of course, in using political conceptions in the history of religions.

2 Cf. Nyberg, H. S., ‘Sassanid Mazdaism according to Moslem Sources,’ Journal of the K.R. Cama Oriental Institute 39 (1958), 32.Google Scholar

3 Cf. Boyce, M., ‘Zariadres and Zarēr,’ BSOAS 17 (1955), 463 ff.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

4 When Widengren, Geo in his ‘Der iranische Hintergrund der Gnosis’ in Zeitschrift für Religions- und Geistesgeschichte 4 (1952), 18CrossRefGoogle Scholar (Sonderdruck) says, “der iranische Hintergrund der Gnosis sich in vielen Fällen eben als ein parthischer erwiesen hat,” I cannot follow him. There is no evidence that the Parthian horsemen brought new philosophical or religious ideas from eastern Iran and spread them in the West.

5 See the summary, with references, in Duchesne-Guillemin, J., The Western Response to Zoroaster (Oxford, 1958), 7278.Google Scholar It is interesting to recall that Reitzenstein was in Göttingen with F. C. Andreas when the Iranian Turfan texts were being deciphered. At the time there was uncertainty about many fragments, whether they were Zoroastrian, Christian, Manichaean, Buddhist or other in content. If he had had our greater knowledge of Manichaeism of today, Reitzenstein might have proposed different theories, and might not have characterized Manichaeism as basically an Iranian religion.

6 Cf. Kerschensteiner, J., Platon und derOrient (Stuttgart, 1945), 211, contraGoogle ScholarJaeger, W., Aristoteles (Berlin, 1923), 133 ffGoogle Scholar.

7 There is no Iranian influence in the Midrash except a few stereotyped formulae, according to Torczyner, H., ‘The Foreign Words in Our Language,’ Our Language (Lšwnnw in Hebrew) 8 (Jerusalem, 1937), 99109Google Scholar.

8 Ginsberg, L., The Legends of the Jews 3 (Philadelphia, 1913), 165 ff.Google Scholar

9 Cf. the introduction p. xci and xcviii to vol. 3 of his translation Le Zend Avesta (Paris, 1893).

10 Cf. the works of Stave, E., Über den Einfluss des Parsimus auf das Judentum (Haarlem, 1898),Google ScholarBöklen, E., Die Verwandschaft der jüdisch-christlichen mit der parsischen Eschatologie (Göttingen, 1902)Google Scholar and others.

11 Cf. G. Widengren (note 4) for a summary, plus Gershevitch, I., ‘A Parthian Title in the Hymn of the Soul,’ JRAS (1954), 124126Google Scholar.